

Charlie wrote:This is where the UK is ahead of them in terms of compromise. Same sex marriages are legal here, but are not officially marriages (as this has to be between a man and a woman). Instead they are called "civil partnerships" but afford the same legal status as a married couple, so to all intents and purposes it is "marriage". This at least appeased some of the religious arguments.
goddessoflubbock wrote:The Catholic Church has very strict rules on sex between partners of the same sex. One of them must be a priest. Ba dum dum......
goddess wrote:Seriously however, there is quite a large *active* lesbian contingent among the sisterhood.....
adhocisadirtyword wrote:Charlie wrote:This is where the UK is ahead of them in terms of compromise. Same sex marriages are legal here, but are not officially marriages (as this has to be between a man and a woman). Instead they are called "civil partnerships" but afford the same legal status as a married couple, so to all intents and purposes it is "marriage". This at least appeased some of the religious arguments.
Many of our states offer this as well - and I believe California has the most rights allowed for civil unions than other states. However, this isn't actually a decent compromise for those of us who believe religion shouldn't have say in our laws. Beyond that, there are some great articles written by gays lately that define why the word "marriage" is so important to them. I would look to Andrew Sullivan at The Atlantic as one who really stands out to me.
As others have stated, nobody is forcing religious institutions to hold marriage ceremonies for anyone. I didn't get married in a church. And "god" was never mentioned in my ceremony. There's plenty of ways to get hitched these days.

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